![](https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/64205e7549b79651296c7e6e6ec1b011.jpg?s=120&d=mm&r=g)
On Wed, 13 Nov 1996, Declan McCullagh wrote:
Date: Wed, 13 Nov 1996 13:12:50 -0800 (PST) From: Declan McCullagh <declan@well.com> Reply-To: freedom-knights@jetcafe.org To: Dave Hayes <dave@kachina.jetcafe.org> Cc: freedom-knights@jetcafe.org, cypherpunks@toad.com Subject: Re: [REBUTTAL] Censorship on cypherpunks?, from The Netly News
I am amused. I gave Dave Hayes about an 8.5 out of 10 on the scale of meaningless political rants.
Jealousy rears it's ugly head. You just wish you had the credibility that Dave Hayes has.
I'll address some of his points.
Do it within his text as you are supposed to.
* "Political safety?" I stand by my record as a writer. Check out http://www.eff.org/pub/Publications/Declan_McCullagh/ for some of my recent articles. Political safety? Hardly.
This Declan_McCullagh is a long-time cabal.member, so his critique of a Freedom-Knight like Dave Hayes is to be given short shrift.
* Dave says "Notice that the net is compared to a home or private club." Wrong. I never compared the Net to such. However, a mailing list run on a computer in someone's home with his own cash is very similar to a private club. There are private speech restrictions on the Net. Gated communities exist. Try to join the "lawprofs" mailing list. You can't; you're not (and quite obviously anything but) a law professor. Censorship? Not quite.
None of that analogy is applicable to the cyberpunks list. When a list gets as big as that, it it no longer to be considered a "mailing-list" but it is a _public_ forum. The whole problem here is the abuse of power by both the EFF and John Gilmore.
* Contrary to what you seem to be asserting, Gilmore hasn't blocked Vulis from posting.
* Dave warns us to consider "what would happen if one parent company owned *all* communications media." Then we have problems. I've written about this in an Internet Underground magazine column. However, this is not the case now. Or are you arguing the government should get involved and force Gilmore to allow Vulis on his list?
No, he is saying that people can use an e-mail filter and not listen to Vulis if they want to. It was a very simple thing; are you too uneducated to know how to use an e-mail filter?
By the way, if you haven't figured it out yet, Mr. "Freedom Knight of Usenet," a private mailing list is NOT Usenet. Get a clue.
Wrong! The cyberpunks mailing list is PUBLIC property and should NOT be controlled by John Gilmore! This just goes to show the real facist censorship motives that the EFF has behind it. Time to kill the EFF, and let it rot in hell. They are disgrace to the entire InterNet community. I run 6 different mailing lists, and have NEVER puled the plug on anyone, even when they criticize me. The first time is the time when you lose all credibility, and there is never any forgiveness for a plug-puller.
-Declan
-aga.admin InterNet Freedom Council
On Wed, 13 Nov 1996, Dave Hayes wrote:
[This is a rebuttal to a misguided news article.]
Cypher-Censored By Declan McCullagh (declan@well.com)
Thank you for leaving your email address. It makes this easier.
You people (read: the unaware and hypnotized masses, which includes reporters who's desire for attention and political safety holds them in line with the consensual illusion) keep missing the real issue, and substituting issues which only hold themselves in place.
[Those of you who know, please excuse the mediaistic terms used in this rebuttal. One must use the symbols one is given to communicate at the level of understanding of those who use them.]
Thus began a debate over what the concept of censorship means in a forum devoted to opposing it. Did Gilmore have the right to show Vulis the virtual door? Or should he have let the ad hominem attacks continue, encouraging people to set their filters accordingly? The incident raises deeper questions about how a virtual community can prevent one person from ruining the forum for all and whether only government controls on expression can be called "censorship."
"Cyberspace" is interacted with using tools under the control of the interactor.
yes, and all you need is a simple mail filter.
In person-to-person interaction, one's only real defense against what one decides to call "unwanted" is to remove oneself from the arena of interaction. It may not be possible to ignore or run away from certain sources of input.
In cyberspace, however, it is not only possible but necessary and even desirable. Cyberspace allows one to interact with many more people then can fit in any given physical space. One simply -cannot- receive input from 2000 people and not employ some sort of filtering mechanism. Indeed, cyberspace has many buttons and switches (and even programmatic filters) which allow one to -completely- control whom one interacts with.
Logically, we must conclude that those who frequently and repeatedly cry for the censorship or removal of any source of input from cyberspace are either:
-quite clueless about the tools at their disposal -ideologically or personally opposed to the source of input or -in need of large amounts of attention from others
Cluelessness can be overcome by appropriate teaching and interest in learning (the latter issue we can safely assume users of popular but ineffectual windowing OSes are not able to overcome). Such cluelessness, however, is not and should never be a reason for censorship.
A need for attention can be overcome by refraining from the denial that the need exists, followed by careful observation of that need. More can be said on this, but this is not the forum. Such a need is not and should never be a reason for censorship.
Idelological opposition is another matter entirely. To understand this better, we'll need to observe this in action. Here is an example:
Vulis portrays himself as a victim, but as I posted to the list last week, I disagree. Anyone who's spent any time on the 100-plus-messages-a-day list can read for themselves the kind of nasty daily messages that came from Vulis's keyboard.
"Nasty" is, of course, by this reporter's standard of "nasty". Granted this standard may in fact be shared by Mr. Gilmore, however a shared standard is not necessarily an appropriate or correct standard.
The list is on Gilmore's machine and he can do what he wants with it; he can moderate the postings, he can censor material, he can shut the whole thing down. By kicking off an offending user, a list owner merely exercises his property right. There's no government involvement, so the First Amendment doesn't apply. And the deleted, disgruntled user is free to start his own mailing list with different rules.
Notice how, once the opposition is admitted to, the rationalization begins. Suddenly this is not a matter of censorship, but of ownership. Just as suddenly, the classic anti-free-speech arguments of "if you don't like it, start yer own" begin to surface. (Anyone ever notice how this resembles the "love it or leave it" mentality of certain American patriotic organizations?)
What would ideological opposition be without the attempt at analogy? Here we witness another example:
But then the question is whether Gilmore should have exercised that right, especially in such an open forum. Again, I think Gilmore's actions were justified. Consider inviting someone into your home or private club. If your guest is a boor, you might ask him to leave. If your guest is an slobbish drunk of a boor, you have a responsibility to require him to leave before he ruins the evening of others.
Notice that the net is compared to a home or private club. Actually the net is neither, however that would not serve the purposes of this analogy, so this fact is convienently forgotton.
The net is a wonderful place. Any ideology, no matter who disagrees or agrees with it, can be expressed and discussed here...assuming those who oppose this ideology do not have their way with the source of expression. There is a more refined and deeper truth to be found in the very existence of the set of all human ideologies, which is just beginning to show itself to some netizens. Unfortunately, this truth can be ruined when people equate some notion of value to sources which ignore all but a tiny subset of the set of all ideologies:
Eugene Volokh, a law professor at UCLA, runs a number of mailing lists and has kicked people off to maintain better editorial control. Volokh says that the most valuable publications are those that exercise the highest degree of editorial control.
Value to whom and for what? If the editorial control produces one small element of the set of all ideologies, then this is only of value to the people who support this ideology. Given that the set of people who support an issue is smaller than the set of people who support and oppose an issue, would the value not increase by allowing both sides of an issue equal speaking time?
For his part, Gilmore calls removing the Russian mathematician "an act of leadership." He says: "It said we've all been putting up with this guy and it's time to stop. You're not welcome here... It seemed to me that a lot of the posts on cypherpunks were missing the mark. They seemed to have an idea that their ability to speak through my machine was guaranteed by the Constitution."
It is sad to note that this is the leader of one of America's forerunning organizations of freedom who says these words. For all *his* ideology of free speech, this statement reveals the hypocrasy he lives with for all to see. The true litmus test of free speech is to encounter speech that you *want* to censor.
Mr. Gilmore, and other like minded parties, might want to consider what would happen if one parent company owned *all* communications media. Would they they be so supportive of the ideology of ownership and communciation they espouse?
Indeed. The EFF is a disgrace to the entire InterNet. The EFF is definitely a censorship organization, and it should never be trusted again.
------ Dave Hayes - Altadena CA, USA - dave@jetcafe.org Freedom Knight of Usenet - http://www.jetcafe.org/~dave/usenet
Truth (n.) - the most deadly weapon ever discovered by humanity. Capable of destroying entire perceptual sets, cultures, and realities. Outlawed by all governments everywhere. Possession is normally punishable by death.